Featured
in the concerts on Sunday at the Knockdown Center in Queens were, from
left: Donald Palumbo, the Met’s chorus master; the baritone Justin
Austin; the tenor Stephen Costello; Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the company’s
music director; the soprano Angel Blue; and the bass-baritone Eric
Owens.
Credit... Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
Mixing Healing and Strife, the Met Opera Sings Again On Sunday evening, 430 days after the coronavirus pandemic closed the Metropolitan Opera, the company returned.
Members
of the Met’s orchestra and chorus, conducted by its music director,
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, and joined by four soloists, twice presented a
45-minute program for an audience of 150.
The
location wasn’t the company’s home at Lincoln Center; instead, the
concerts were held at the Knockdown Center, a door factory turned
rough-hewed art and performance space in Queens. But these were truly,
finally Met forces, brought together amid the contentious labor disputes
that still threaten the company’s official reopening, planned for
September.
“What a privilege it is to say good evening to you, to welcome you
here,” Nézet-Séguin told the audience before beginning the concert. The
purpose, he added, was primarily to “resume what we do” — that is, to
make music. But the performances were also intended as an expression of
gratitude to essential workers; some tickets were set aside for
emergency medical staff affiliated with Mount Sinai’s hospital in
Queens.
Owens sang an aria from Mozart’s “Die Zauberflöte.” Credit... Jeenah Moon for The New York TimesHovering over the concerts were the Met’s continuing labor tensions. The
company’s closure has cost it some $150 million in revenue, and its
many union workers were furloughed early in the pandemic. Peter Gelb,
the general manager, has, like administrators at performing arts
institutions everywhere, been trying to exact long-term concessions from
the Met’s labor force, which the unions are strongly resisting.
Just days ago, the Met reached a deal with the union representing its chorus, dancers and some others. But talks with the orchestra musicians ,
who agreed in March to begin accepting some payments in exchange for
returning to the bargaining table, are ongoing. And on Thursday, the
union representing the stage hands, who have been locked out since
December, held a boisterous rally outside Lincoln Center.
Without glossing over the strife, the Queens concerts (I attended the
second) came across as a genuine gesture of good will and shared
artistic commitment. Nézet-Séguin told the crowd that he and the artists
had tried to devise a program that reflected the hardships we’ve all
endured, but also offered comfort and hope.
The program also made it clear that the Met is attempting to address
longstanding issues of inequity brought to the forefront of the nation’s
consciousness in months of demonstrations against racial injustice last
year. Three of the four superb solo singers were Black, and the
offerings included an aria from Terence Blanchard’s opera “Fire Shut Up
in My Bones,” which is planned to open the Met’s season in September — the first work by a Black composer ever presented by the company.
Blue sang the tender “Ave Maria” from Verdi’s “Otello.” Credit... Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
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